Institution
Harbin Engineering University
Education•Harbin, Heilongjiang, China•
About: Harbin Engineering University is a education organization based out in Harbin, Heilongjiang, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Control theory & Microstructure. The organization has 31149 authors who have published 27940 publications receiving 276787 citations. The organization is also known as: HEU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: An in–depth review of major breakthroughs in recent advanced functional nanomaterials for photo–triggered therapy is presented, and an outlook of the future directions of the rapidly growing functional nanomechanical directions is given.
408 citations
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TL;DR: This review summarizes the metallurgical properties of next-generation NiTi instruments, the impact of thermomechanical treatment on instrument flexibility, and the resistance to cyclic fatigue and torsion.
406 citations
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TL;DR: The hollow Fe3O4-Fe nanoparticles with average diameter and shell thickness of 20 and 8 nm, respectively, were uniformly anchored on the graphene sheets without obvious aggregation and the minimal reflection loss RL values of the composite could reach -30 dB at the absorber thickness ranging from 2.0 to 5.0 mm.
Abstract: We developed a strategy for coupling hollow Fe3O4–Fe nanoparticles with graphene sheets for high-performance electromagnetic wave absorbing material. The hollow Fe3O4–Fe nanoparticles with average diameter and shell thickness of 20 and 8 nm, respectively, were uniformly anchored on the graphene sheets without obvious aggregation. The minimal reflection loss RL values of the composite could reach −30 dB at the absorber thickness ranging from 2.0 to 5.0 mm, greatly superior to the solid Fe3O4–Fe/G composite and most magnetic EM wave absorbing materials recently reported. Moreover, the addition amount of the composite into paraffin matrix was only 18 wt %.
400 citations
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TL;DR: In this review of algorithms for intrinsic disorder prediction, the basic concepts of various prediction methods for IDPs are summarized, the strengths and shortcomings of many of the methods are analyzed, and the difficulties and directions of future development of IDP prediction techniques are discussed.
Abstract: The discovery of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDP) (i.e., biologically active proteins that do not possess stable secondary and/or tertiary structures) came as an unexpected surprise, as the existence of such proteins is in contradiction to the traditional "sequence-->structure-->function" paradigm. Accurate prediction of a protein's predisposition to be intrinsically disordered is a necessary prerequisite for the further understanding of principles and mechanisms of protein folding and function, and is a key for the elaboration of a new structural and functional hierarchy of proteins. Therefore, prediction of IDPs has attracted the attention of many researchers, and a number of prediction tools have been developed. Predictions of disorder, in turn, are playing major roles in directing laboratory experiments that are leading to the discovery of ever more disordered proteins, and thereby leading to a positive feedback loop in the investigation of these proteins. In this review of algorithms for intrinsic disorder prediction, the basic concepts of various prediction methods for IDPs are summarized, the strengths and shortcomings of many of the methods are analyzed, and the difficulties and directions of future development of IDP prediction techniques are discussed.
399 citations
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TL;DR: A manganese-calcium cluster that looks and acts like the oxygen evolution center in photosystem II is synthesized, which structurally resembles the biological complex, with the notable exception of bridging protein ligands and water-binding sites on a dangling Mn atom.
Abstract: Photosynthetic splitting of water into oxygen by plants, algae, and cyanobacteria is catalyzed by the oxygen-evolving center (OEC). Synthetic mimics of the OEC, which is composed of an asymmetric manganese-calcium-oxygen cluster bound to protein groups, may promote insight into the structural and chemical determinants of biological water oxidation and lead to development of superior catalysts for artificial photosynthesis. We synthesized a Mn4Ca-cluster similar to the native OEC in both the metal-oxygen core and the binding protein groups. Like the native OEC, the synthetic cluster can undergo four redox transitions and shows two magnetic resonance signals assignable to redox and structural isomerism. Comparison with previously synthesized Mn3CaO4-cubane clusters suggests that the fourth Mn ion determines redox potentials and magnetic properties of the native OEC.
391 citations
Authors
Showing all 31363 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Peng Shi | 137 | 1371 | 65195 |
Lei Zhang | 130 | 2312 | 86950 |
Yang Liu | 129 | 2506 | 122380 |
Tao Zhang | 123 | 2772 | 83866 |
Wei Zhang | 104 | 2911 | 64923 |
Wei Liu | 102 | 2927 | 65228 |
Feng Yan | 101 | 1041 | 41556 |
Lianzhou Wang | 95 | 596 | 31438 |
Xiaodong Xu | 94 | 1122 | 50817 |
Zhiguo Yuan | 93 | 633 | 28645 |
Rong Wang | 90 | 950 | 32172 |
Jun Lin | 88 | 699 | 30426 |
Yufeng Zheng | 87 | 797 | 31425 |
Taihong Wang | 84 | 279 | 25945 |
Mao-Sheng Cao | 81 | 314 | 24046 |